User:Cassidylight/Ecofeminist art/Bibliography

You will be compiling your bibliography and creating an outline of the changes you will make in this sandbox.

Outline of proposed changes
Click on the edit button to draft your outline.

ORENSTEIN ARTICLE

- written by Gloria Feman Orenstein ecofeminist art author briefly mentioned in article

- add some of Gloria Orenstein personal background info

- discuss what the ethical considerations are when analyzing an ecofeminism art piece (materials used, leftover residues...)

- reviews artworks from artists including

Mierle Laderman Ukeles

Lynne Hull (1990)

Jackie Brookner

- include photos of artwork from these artists (some listed in the article already just missing additional information) & describe further context behind artwork

WALLEN ARTICLE

- emphasize role of ecological art in the process of promoting a more sustainable culture of people

- more history on ecological art in general and how it emerged in late 1960's mid 70's male artists were recognized first before

Helen and Newton Harrison piece from 2007-2009 show photos go into more detail

- more info on Betsy Damon and add photo of her Living Water Garden, 2010 piece that was constructed with local collaborators in Chengdu, China

O’BRIEN ARTICLE

3 types of contemporary environmental art


 * explain critical, promethean, integrative
 * critical: "Artist Hans Haacke has been influential in this area, in particular with his 1972 Rhinewater purification plant, which raised the issue of the deterioration of the water quality in the Rhine river"
 * promethean: "Promethean environmental art includes the (often macho, American) work that uses nature as a raw material and focuses on the spectacular and the sublime, sometimes without any evident desire to heal the humanity/ nature split. Examples include Walter de Maria's Lighting field, a work focused on attracting lightning strikes"
 * integrative: "Integrative environmental art is a practice whose goal, or effect, is seen as healing rather than merely diagnosis. The focus of healing is either nature itself, or the perceived split between humanity and environment. This ranges from the ephemeral, photographically documented rearrangement of natural objects as in the work of Andy Goldsworthy, to the geo-surveillance activities of the group Ocean Earth"

-